Inoculation of a mixture of household organics and shredded wood with inocula from the active phase of composting enhanced mineralization of organic matter and yielded a biologically stabilized product with a more favorable C/N ratio than in a noninoculated treatment. Analysis of phospholipid fatty acids was used to determine total viable microbial biomass and relative amounts of bacteria, Gram positive and Gram negative bacteria, actinomycetes, fungi, thermophiles and nonthermophiles in compost. The initial viable microbial biomass was 6-fold higher in inoculated than in noninoculated compost. The thermophilic phase occurred immediately after inoculation and the total viable biomass afterwards followed the course of temperature. The ratio of viable (sum of phospholipid fatty acids) to dead (sum of diglyceride fatty acids) microbial biomass during this period was generally higher at lower composting temperatures in both inoculated and noninoculated compost. During composting, fluctuations in total viable microbial biomass and in the relative amounts of indicator PLFAs of all microbial groups except Gram negative bacteria was more intensive in noninoculated compost.
Honey bee (Apis mellifera carnica) colonies were placed in two apple orchards treated with the insecticides diazinon and thiacloprid and the fungicide difenoconazole in accordance with a Protection Treatment Plan in the spring of 2007. Pollen and bee bread were collected from combs inside the hives. The residue of diazinon in pollen loads 10 days after orchard treatment was 0.09 mg/kg, and the same amount of residue was found in bee bread 16 days after treatment. In pollen loads 6 days after application 0.03 mg/kg of thiacloprid residues and 0.01 mg/kg of difenoconazole were found on the first day after application. Possible sub-lethal effects on individual honey bees and brood are discussed.
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